Caldeirão da Bolsa

13:30 - Dados States

Espaço dedicado a todo o tipo de troca de impressões sobre os mercados financeiros e ao que possa condicionar o desempenho dos mesmos.

re

por Infoo » 4/8/2006 14:29

vieira.... isto é como qdo se compram ações....

há invest a curto, a médio e a longo prazo

por analogia

dados fracos de emprego... isto é uma reação a curto-prazo.... pois o q pesa neste momento nas carolas é se FED vai continuar a subir taxas na próxima 3ªf

a quente(curto-prazo), hoje não interessa preços elevados das commodities, descida possível de lucros dos próximos T... hoje a história é outra


a médio-longo vamos ver daqui a uns dias
 
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por vieira » 4/8/2006 14:18

É realmente inacreditável. O mercado fica eufórico porque a taxa de desemprego aumentou pela 1ª vez desde Novembro. Ainda bem que a economia está abrandar, pensam eles. Vamos comprar, vamos comprar. :twisted: Só que esquecem que estão a comprar acções de empresas que, com a economia a abrandar, vão vender menos, vão ter menos lucros... :twisted:

Ahhh que eu já vi este filme e sei como acaba!! :lol:
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por scpnuno » 4/8/2006 13:59

:wink:

Obrigadinha, Infooo
Esta é a vantagem da ambição:
Podes não chegar á Lua
Mas tiraste os pés do chão...
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13:30 - Dados States

por Infoo » 4/8/2006 13:54

8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JULY AVERAGE WORKWEEK STEADY AT 33.9 HOURS
8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JULY AVERAGE HOURLY EARNINGS UP 0.4%, UP 3.8% YR-ON-YR
8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JULY SERVICE JOBS UP 115,000, GOODS JOBS DOWN 2,000
8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JULY RETAIL JOBS FLAT, FACTORY JOBS DOWN 15,000
8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JULY UNEMPLOYMENT RATE HIGHEST SINCE FEB.
8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JULY UNEMPLOYMENT RATE 4.8% VS 4.6% IN JUNE
8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JUNE NONFARM PAYROLLS UP REV 124,000 VS 121,000 PREV
8:30 AM ET 8/4/06 U.S. JULY NONFARM PAYROLLS UP 113,000 VS 143,000 EXPECTED

ECONOMIC REPORT: U.S nonfarm payrolls rise 113,000 in July; Jobless rate rises to 4.8%, highest since Feb.
By Greg Robb, MarketWatch
Last Update: 8:30 AM ET Aug 4, 2006

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - U.S. job growth continued at its lukewarm pace in July, the Labor Department said Friday.
U.S. nonfarm payrolls rose by 113,000 in July after a revised 124,000 gain in June, the agency said.
Economists surveyed by MarketWatch were expecting payroll gains of about 143,000 in July.
The unemployment rate rose to 4.8% in July from 4.6% in June. This is the highest level since February.
Average hourly earnings rose 0.4% and are up 3.8% year-on-year. Economists had been expecting a 0.3% gain in earnings.
Economists have viewed the July nonfarm payroll report as critical piece of the puzzle over whether the Fed will hike rates again or pause on Aug. 8. The sluggish pace of job growth and the rise in the unemployment rate may give the Fed room to pause after 17 straight meetings with a rate increase.
The gain in payrolls is in line with the average job growth of 112,000 in the second quarter. This is a slower trend than the 176,000 job pace in the first three months of the year.
In July, goods-producing industries lost 2,000 jobs while private-sector service-producing jobs gained 115,000.
Within services, retail jobs were flat after three straight monthly declines.
The biggest gain was in professional services which added 43,000 jobs.
The manufacturing sector lost 15,000 jobs in July, reversing a gain of 22,000 in the previous month.
Construction employment rose by 6,000 in July, the first increase in the past three months.
Among 278 industries, 53.2% were adding employees in July. Among 84 manufacturing industries, 45.2% were adding jobs.
Average hourly wages rose 7 cents or 0.4% to $16.76. Average hourly earnings are up 3.8% in the past year. June wage gains were revised down to a 0.4% gain, compared with the initial estimate of a 0.5% increase.
The average workweek was steady at 33.9 hours. Within manufacturing, average hours rose to 41.5 from 41.3 in June. Factory overtime was down 6 minutes to 4.5 hours.
Total hours worked in the economy rose 0.1% to 105.2. The manufacturing index rose by 0.4% to 97.3.
In a separate survey of households, the Labor Department found that unemployment jumped by 248,000 in July. Employment fell by 34,000, while 29,000 dropped out of the workforce.
Payrolls in May and June were revised higher/lower by a total of xx,000. June's payrolls, which had originally been reported as an increase of 121,000, rose by xx,000 in the latest revision. Payrolls increased by xx,000 in May, up/down from 92,000 estimated earlier.
Retail sales down three consecutive months.
 
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